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New Netherland Institute New Netherland Research Center The Fur Trade The Fur Trade Contact and Commerce between Indians and Settlers Contact and Commerce between Indians and Settlers A Lesson for the A Lesson for the Fourth Fourth Grade Grade The New Netherland Research Center The New Netherland Research Center and the New Netherland Institute and the New Netherland Institute 2012 2012

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New Netherland Institute New Netherland Research Center

The Fur TradeThe Fur Trade

Contact and Commerce between Indians and SettlersContact and Commerce between Indians and Settlers

A Lesson for the A Lesson for the FourthFourth GradeGrade

The New Netherland Research CenterThe New Netherland Research Center and the New Netherland Instituteand the New Netherland Institute

20122012

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ContentsContents

Lesson  Procedures             3      Worksheets                  insert  following  page  6      Artifacts                   7    Historic  and  Modern  Documents           11      

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Lesson ProceduresLesson Procedures and Worksheetsand Worksheets

The Fur Trade: Contact and Commerce between Indians and Dutch Settlers Essential Question: How did trade between American Indians and Dutch settlers affect both parties? Grade 4 Content Understandings, New York State Social Studies Standards: Social Studies Standards This lesson covers: Native Americans of New York State, Three Worlds Meet in the Americas, and Colonial and Revolutionary Periods. It requires students to consider how American Indians and Dutch settlers adapted to their physical environment; cultural similarities and differences between American Indians and Europeans; and the production and exchange of goods (economic systems). Common Core Standards: Reading Standards By analyzing historic documents, this lesson will help students to develop essential reading, writing, and critical thinking skills. They will read and analyze informational texts and draw inferences from those texts. Students will explain what happened and why based on information from the readings. Additionally, as a class, students will discuss general academic and domain-specific words or phrases relevant to the unit. Speaking and Listening Standards Students will engage in group and teacher-led collaborative discussions. Using the images and texts provided, they will pose hypotheses and respond to specific questions. They will report to the class about their group’s assigned topic, explaining their own ideas, analyses, and observations. Furthermore, they will provide specific reasons and evidence to support their claims. Writing Standards To conclude this lesson, students will use relevant information and vocabulary from assigned readings to write a letter to the Dutch West India Company. They will analyze the experiences of American Indians and Dutch traders using descriptive details from the texts and drawing evidence from Isaack de Rasiere’s report to the directors of the West India Company.

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Historical Context: Acquiring furs—particularly beaver pelts—was the driving force behind the early decades of Dutch colonization of North America. Due to overhunting, beavers were almost extinct in Europe by 1621, when the Dutch West India Company was founded. But European demand for felt hats was high, and North American beavers served, for a time, to fill the gap in supply. Traders who settled in New Netherland (a territory that spread across New York, New Jersey, Delaware, and parts of Connecticut and Pennsylvania) purchased pelts from Indians in exchange for wampum and/or goods manufactured in Europe. Wampum was a type of shell bead. The beads were initially produced for ceremonial purposes but came to circulate among Indians and Dutch settlers as money. Trade goods included duffels (a type of coarse woolen cloth), glass beads, and metal tools (such as axes, awls, and knives). The following classroom activities explore contact and commerce between Indians and Dutch settlers, focusing on the goods supplied and the demands made by both parties. Together, the activities model the process of historical research, asking students to develop hypotheses and to revise those hypotheses based on new evidence. Translations of historic documents and other readings have been edited and simplified for use by elementary school students. Activities: Artifact Analysis by Expert Groups The teacher should divide students into expert groups, each with a different image to analyze:

Group 1 - Wampum (The image shows shells, beads in various states of production, and an iron drill known as a mux used to pierce the beads for stringing)

Group 2 – Beaver (This lesson includes an image of a taxidermied beaver from the collection the Holland Society New York City. Teachers might choose to use an image of a beaver pelt as well.)

Group 3 – European trade goods (The image shows glass and metal items that Indians could not themselves produce: glass beads, metal rings, lead musket balls, part of a flintlock musket, metal scissors, a metal hatchet, a metal pot, and arrow points fashioned from metal objects.)

Students should use a graphic organizer to record their answers to the following questions:

• What do you think this item is? • Where and by whom do you think this item was produced? • Who (Indians or Dutch colonists) do you think wanted to acquire this item through trade?

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Note: Particularly in the case of wampum and beaver pelts, this is a bit of a trick question. Both Indians and Dutch settlers traded for these items, because they served as currency in New Netherland.

• How do you think it was used by Indians and/or the Dutch? • How do you think acquiring this item might have affected Dutch or Indian daily life?

After discussion, the teacher should ask group representatives to share their hypotheses with the whole class. Document Analysis by Expert Groups To the same expert groups, the teacher should hand out a relevant historic document to analyze. After reading the document together, students in each group will list in the “what I learned” portion of their graphic organizers information from the document that supports or refutes their initial hypotheses. Students should use this new information to revise their hypotheses.

Group 1 will read the Johannes Megapolensis document on wampum. Group 2 will read the Adriaen van der Donck document on beavers. Group 3 will read archaeologist James Bradley’s chart on how Indians cut up and used a metal pot for raw materials from his book Before Albany.

After discussion, the teacher should ask group representatives to describe what they learned and to present their revised hypotheses with the whole class. Whole Group Lesson on the Fur Trade Students will partner and read an excerpt from L. F. Tantillo’s Edge of New Netherland, which provides an illustrated introduction to the history of the trade between Indians and Dutch settlers. After students complete partner reading, the teacher should lead the whole class in a discussion of the reading, including any difficult words. Some possible discussion questions:

• Were there any words that you did not know? Were you able to figure what they meant? How did you figure that out?

• What did you learn about the fur trade that you did not know? • Did anything you learned surprise you? What? Why? • From what you know from the documents and artifacts, you studied, is there anything

you would add to Tantillo’s description of the fur trade?

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Whole Group Document Analysis The teacher should hand out copies of Isaack de Rasiere’s 1626 report to the directors of the West Indian Company. (The West India Company was a private corporation empowered by the Dutch government to administer Dutch colonies in North and South America.) The class should read the document out loud together, stopping to define difficult words. Students should be prepared to discuss the question of how and why Dutch traders tried to meet Indian demands. Culminating Activity and Assessment The teacher should assign students to new collaborative groups; each group should include at least one representative from each of the three expert groups. Working collaboratively, the new groups will examine hypotheses and review the evidence before writing a response letter to Mr. de Rasiere from the perspective of the directors of the West India Company. Students should draw evidence not only from De Rasiere’s letter but also from other artifacts and readings. It should explore how Indian demands shaped Dutch policy. Alternative assignment might require students to write a short position paper or design a poster on the question: How did trade affect the cultures and economies of American Indians and Dutch settlers? Which of the two was most changed by trade? Use evidence from artifacts and documents to support your argument.  

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ArtifactsArtifacts

The artifacts of the fur trade come from the collections of the New York State Museum and the Holland Society of New York. Images of the artifacts appear on subsequent pages. Wampum: This image shows shell beads in various states of production, along with an iron drill, known as a mux, used to pierce the beads for stringing. Wampum beads—like beaver pelts—served as a medium of exchange among Indians and Europeans in New Netherland. Courtesy of the New York State Museum. Beaver: This taxidermied beaver belongs to the Holland Society of New York. Photograph by Eric Ruijssenaars. European Trade Goods: These goods were manufactured by Europeans for trade with Indians, typically in exchange for pelts. The items shown include glass beads, metal rings, lead musket balls, part of a flintlock musket, metal scissors, a metal hatchet, a metal pot, and arrow points fashioned from metal objects. Courtesy of the New York State Museum.

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Artifact 1Artifact 1

Courtesy of the New York State Museum

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Artifact 2Artifact 2

Courtesy of the Holland Society of New York. Photograph by Eric Ruijssenaars.

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Artifact 3Artifact 3

Courtesy of the New York State Museum

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ReadingsReadings

These historic (primary source) and modern (secondary source) documents have been shortened and simplified for use in elementary school classrooms. The historic documents were originally written in Dutch. Historic Document: Excerpt from Johannes Megapolensis, A Short Account of the Mohawks, 1644. Historic Document: Excerpt from Adriaen van der Donck, A Description of New Netherland, 1655-1656. Modern Document: Chart on “recycling a copper pot” from James Bradley, Before Albany, 2006. Modern Document: Excerpt from L. F. Tantillo, The Edge of New Netherland, 2012.

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ReadingsReadings

Historic Document 1 Historic Document 1

Excerpt from Johannes Megapolensis, A Short Account of the Mohawks, 1644. The Mohawks’ money consists of certain little bones, made of shells or cockles, which are found on the sea-beach; a hole is drilled through the middle of the little bones, and these they string upon thread, or they make of them belts as broad as a hand, or broader, and hang them on their necks, or around their bodies. They have also several holes in their ears, and there they likewise hang some. They value these little bones as highly as many Christians do gold, silver and pearls; but they do not like our money, and esteem it no better than iron. I once showed one of their chiefs a silver coin; he asked how much it was worth among the Christians; and when I told him he laughed exceedingly at us, saying we were fools to value a piece of iron so highly; and if he had such money he would throw it into the river.

Additional information: Dutch settler Adriaen van der Donck wrote in Description of New Netherland: “Wampum is the only money circulating among the Indians and in which one can trade with them. Among our people, too, it is in general use for buying everything one needs.”

Adapted from Dean R. Snow, Charles T. Gehring, and William A. Starna, eds., In Mohawk Country: Early Narratives about a Native People (1996).

Biography: Johannes Megapolensis was a protestant minister (Dutch Reformed Church). He traveled to New Netherland in 1642. He was an employee of Kiliaen van Rensselaer, the patroon of Rensselaerswijck (now part of Albany and Rensselaer counties). In addition to ministering to the Dutch settlers, Megapolensis also learned the Mohawk language and offered religious services to local Indians. The pamphlet, A Short Account of the Mohawks, is based on Megapolensis’s letters to friends in Europe.

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ReadingsReadings

Historic Document 2Historic Document 2

Adriaen van der Donck, A Description of New Netherland, 1655-1656. The beaver pelt, or skin, is thick and densely covered all over with very fine fur. The color is ash gray. The fur is made into the best hats that are worn and by now well known throughout Europe. On the top of the fur some shiny hair is to be seen, which is known as guard hair or more properly winter hair, since it falls out in summer and re-grows in autumn. For hat making the winter hair is pulled out, being coarse and of no value. If the skins are first to go from here to Russia, as is usual, the shiny hair is what makes them sought after. It seems that the Russians value the skins for this hair and cut them into strips and edging for women’s overcoats. By the time the guard hair has gone and the skins are old, soiled, and seemingly worn out, they are returned to be made into hats. Before then, the skins are unsuitable for that purpose, for unless beaver fur is dirty, soiled, and greasy, it will not felt. Adapted from Charles T. Gehring and William Starna, eds. A Description of New Netherland trans. Diederik Willem Goedhuys, 2008.

Biography: Adriaen van der Donck was a Dutch lawyer. He came to New Netherland in 1641 as an employee on Kiliaen van Rensselaer’s patroonship, Rensselaerswijck (now part of Albany and Rensselaer counties). Living near a major Indian trading route, Van der Donck observed Mohawk culture and learned the language. In 1645, he helped colonial officials negotiate a treaty with the Munsee Indians. As a reward for this service, Van der Donck received a 24,000 acre estate in what is now the city of Yonkers. However, Van der Donck’s political activities later put him in conflict with Director-General Petrus Stuyvesant. The main goal of A Description of New Netherland was to encourage interested Europeans to consider settling in New Netherland.

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ReadingsReadings ModernModern Document 1Document 1

Recycling a copper pot from James Bradley, Before Albany.

For Native people, kettles often served as a source of raw material from which other tools and objects could be made. One common practice was to cut a piece of kettle into a rectangular blank (a) that was then rolled into a tubular bead (b). In a similar manner, trapezoidal blanks (c) could be made into conical liners for wooden pipes (d) or bangles. Disc-shaped pendants (f) were produced in this way. The heavier-gauge metal from the lugs was often used for implements. After being removed from the kettle, the lugs were hammered out flat and scored to be cut into arrow points (h). The finished points (i) could be perforated for easier attachment or not. Other implements made from kettle pieces included knives that mimicked the shape of European styles (j) or reflected Native taste (k). Even the kettle’s iron handle was re-used. After removal, it was hammered out straight and ground down into an awl (g). From James Bradley, Before Albany : An Archaeology of Native-Dutch Relations in the Capital Region, 1600-1664 (2006).

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ReadingsReadings Modern Document 2Modern Document 2

L.  F.  Tantillo  describes  trapping,  processing,  and  trading  beaver  fur.      Section  1    At  first  it  was  fur  in  North  America  that  interested  Europeans.  Indians  knew  where  and  how  to  obtain  it.  There  were  a  number  of  ways  Indian  hunters  caught  beavers.  They  used  traps,  snares,  nets,  arrows,  and  spears.    Indian  women  processed  the  fur.  The  hide  was  stretched  out  on  a  circular  frame  made  of  tree  branches  and  rawhide  cords.  First,  the  skin  was  scraped  clean.  Then  it  was  smeared  with  a  mixture  of  cooked  brains  or  liver.  Afterward,  the  skin  was  washed  and  rubbed  dry  with  a  tight  rope.  A  trading  party  would  carry  the  furs  to  European  settlements.    Section  2    Beaver  pelts  brought  high  prices  in  Europe,  where  they  were  used  to  make  hats.  Indians  traded  pelts  for  European  goods,  such  as  firearms,  musket  balls,  gun  powder,  iron  tools,  metal  cooking  utensils,  cloth,  pipes,  and  tobacco.  Some  of  these  trade  goods  were  transformed  by  Indian  artisans  to  serve  different  uses.  For  example,  an  axe  could  be  broken  apart  to  make  knives  and  scrapers.    A  copper  kettle,  instead  of  heating  water,  might  be  divided  into  smaller  pieces  and  used  as  ornaments  or  arrowheads.    In  addition,  there  was  wampum  or  sewant,  beads  made  from  grinding  and  polishing  shells.  These  beads  varied  in  value  depending  on  their  color  and  quality.  Wampum  was  like  money  and  was  accepted  as  currency  by  both  Indians  and  European  settlers.    Adapted  from  L.  F.  Tantillo,  The  Edge  of  New  Netherland  (2011).  

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ReadingsReadings

Historic Document 3Historic Document 3  Excerpt  from  Isaack  de  Rasiere’s  report  to  the  directors  of  the  West  India  Company,  September  23,  1626.    I  am  sending  your  Honors  110  defective  kettles.  They  cannot  be  sold  here,  being  broken  and  leaky.  We  have  also  a  number  of  copper  kettles,  which  cannot  be  traded  here.  I  suppose  you  sent  them  for  the  French  Indians.*  They  do  not  want  such  things  from  us  because  they  can  get  enough  of  them  from  the  French  and  because  they  are  too  heavy  to  carry  far.    If  your  Honors  will  continue  to  supply  me  with  duffels,**  I  shall  know  how  to  stock  Fort  Orange***  so  that  the  French  Indians  will  never  again  come  there  in  vain.  This  is  a  matter  that  would  discourage  Indians  from  coming  to  us  from  so  far  off  and  that  for  nothing.    I  have  only  about  30  pieces  of  cloth  in  colors  that  are  in  demand,  that  is,  blue  and  standard  grey.  The  rest  I  have  are  all  red,  of  which  I  can  hardly  sell  a  yard.  The  Indians  say  that  it  hinders  them  in  hunting,  being  visible  too  far  off.  They  all  call  for  black,  the  darker  the  color  the  better.  Red  and  green  they  will  not  take.  If  your  Honors  will  provide  me  with  duffels,  I  hope  to  send  back  about  10,000  skins.  In  this  way  trade  may  be  carried  on  in  the  most  profitable  way  to  the  satisfaction  of  both  sides.  The  Indians  will  be  all  the  more  diligent  in  hunting  when  they  see  that  when  they  have  skins  they  can  get  what  they  want.  At  present,  the  Mohawks  complain  bitterly,  saying:  “Why  should  we  go  hunting?  Half  the  time  you  have  no  cloth.”    

Notes:    *  By  “French  Indians,”  De  Rasiere  means  natives  of  the  St.  Lawrence  and  Ottawa  valleys,  in  what  is  now  Canada.  These  Indians  were  allies  of  the  French  who  settled  there.    **  Duffel  was  a  type  of  coarse  woolen  cloth,  ***  Fort  Orange  was  a  Dutch  trading  post  located  in  present-­‐day  Albany,  New  York.  

 Adapted  from  A  J  F  Van  Laer,  Documents  Relating  to  Netherland,  1624-­‐1626,  in  the  Henry  E.  Huntington  Library  (1924).    Biography:  Isaack  de  Rasiere  was  an  employee  of  the  Dutch  West  India  Company  (WIC).  The  WIC  was  the  private  corporation  responsible  for  overseeing  colonization  of  North  and  South  America.  In  1626,  De  Rasiere  was  sent  by  the  WIC  to  New  Netherland  to  report  on  conditions  in  the  colony,  particularly  as  related  to  the  fur  trade.